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"From its provocative cover showing a young black boy with a gun to his head all the way through its satirical, ironic, edgy story to a kicky conclusion, Percival Everett's new novel is a stunner. It is the Columbia native's finest book since his debut with "Suder" nearly two decades and 13 books ago, and merits a place on any short list for the best novel this year. It may also prove the breakthrough book for a writer whose artistry and craft and versatility have always ranked considerably higher than his place on any best-seller lists . . . It's also a tour de force for Everett, who cheerily blasts apart our notions of political/racial correctness in a story that is sharp-edged yet lyrically tender-hearted. It's a brilliant book that can only benefit from word of mouth and is virtually guaranteed to be even better than you've heard it is." —The State (Columbia, SC)
A novel of family, race, and publishing in America.
Percival Everett's most recent novel, the academic satire Glyph, was hailed by the New York Times as "both a treatise and a romp." His new novel combines a touching story of a man coming to terms with his family heritage and a satiric indictment of race and publishing in America.
Avant-garde novelist and college professor, woodworker, and fly fisherman -- Thelonious (Monk) Ellison has never allowed race to define his identity. But as both a writer and an African-American, he is offended and angered by the success of We's Lives in Da Ghetto, the exploitative debut novel of a young, middle-class black woman who once visited "some relatives in Harlem for a couple of days." Hailed as an authentic representation of the African-American experience, the book is a national bestseller and its author feted on the Kenya Dunston television show. Her book's success rankles all the more as Monk's own most recent novel has just notched its seventh rejection.
Even as his career as a writer appears to have stalled, Monk finds himself coping with changes in his personal life. Forced to assume responsibility for a mother rapidly succumbing to Alzheimer's, Monk leaves his home in Los Angeles to return to the Washington, DC house in which he grew up. There he must come to terms with his ailing mother, his siblings, his own childhood and youth, and the legacy of his physician father, a suicide some seven years before. In need of distraction from old memories, new responsibilities, and his professional stagnation, Monk composes, in a heat of inspiration and energy, a fierce parody of the sort of exploitative, ghetto wanna-be lit represented by We's Lives in Da Ghetto.
But when his agent sends this literary indictment (included here in its entirety) out to publishers, it is greeted as an authentic new voice of black America. Monk -- or his pseudonymous alter ego, Stagg R. Leigh -- is offered money, fame, success beyond anything Monk has known. And as demand begins to build for meetings with and appearances by Leigh, Monk is faced with a whole new set of problems.
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PERCIVAL EVERETT is Professor of English at University of Southern California. A judge for the National Book Awards in 1998, he is the author of 13 previous books, including Glyph (1999), Frenzy (1997), Watershed (1996), and Suder (1983).
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